1936 Finnish parliamentary election|
|
|
|   | 
First party | 
Second party | 
Third party |  
|   | 
 | 
 | 
 |  
| Leader | 
Kaarlo Harvala | 
Pekka Heikkinen | 
Ernst von Born |  
| Party | 
SDP | 
Agrarian | 
RKP |  
| Last election | 
37.33%, 78 seats | 
22.54%, 53 seats | 
10.42%, 21 seats |  
| Seats won | 
83 | 
53 | 
21 |  
| Seat change | 
 5 | 
 | 
 |  
| Popular vote | 
452,751 | 
262,917 | 
131,440 |  
| Percentage | 
38.59% | 
22.41% | 
11.20% |  
| Swing | 
 1.26pp | 
 0.13pp | 
 0.78pp |  
  |  
|   | 
Fourth party | 
Fifth party | 
Sixth party |  
|   | 
 | 
 | 
 |  
| Leader | 
Juho Kusti Paasikivi | 
Vilho Annala | 
Aimo Cajander |  
| Party | 
National Coalition | 
IKL | 
National Progressive |  
| Last election | 
16.93%, 32 seats | 
Alliance with National Coalition | 
7.41%, 11 seats |  
| Seats won | 
20 | 
14 | 
7 |  
| Seat change | 
 12 | 
– | 
 4 |  
| Popular vote | 
121,619 | 
97,891 | 
73,654 |  
| Percentage | 
10.36% | 
8.34% | 
6.28% |  
| Swing | 
 6.57pp | 
– | 
 1.13pp |  
  |  
|   | 
Seventh party | 
Eighth party |  
|   | 
 | 
 |  
| Party | 
Small Farmers' | 
People's |  
| Last election | 
3.39%, 3 seats | 
0.85%, 2 seats |  
| Seats won | 
1 | 
1 |  
| Seat change | 
 2 | 
 1 |  
| Popular vote | 
23,159 | 
7,449 |  
| Percentage | 
1.97% | 
0.63 |  
| Swing | 
 1.42pp | 
 0.22pp |  
  | 
 
 | 
Parliamentary elections were held in Finland on 1 and 2 July 1936. Following the election Prime Minister Toivo Mikael Kivimäki of the National Progressive Party was defeated in a confidence vote in September 1936 and resigned in October. Kyösti Kallio of the Agrarian League formed a centrist minority government after Pehr Evind Svinhufvud (National Coalition Party) refused to allow the Social Democrats to join the government. After Svinhufvud's defeat in the February 1937 presidential election, Kallio took office as the new President in March 1937, and he allowed the Social Democrats, Agrarians and Progressives to form the first centre-left or "red soil" ("red" for the Social Democrats and "soil" for the Agrarians) Finnish government. Aimo Cajander (Progressive) became Prime Minister, although the real strong men of the government were Finance Minister Väinö Tanner (Social Democrat) and Defence Minister Juho Niukkanen (Agrarian).